The first time I cut my hair was when I was
nine. I had been giving my mum hell on Sunday evenings when it was time to get
it woven for school. She just decided to put an end to my nonsense and took me
to Baba Barber in Obalende .
I remember being strapped to his squeaky old,
reclined metal and torn brown leather-chair. It must have taken four adults to
hold me down. I can never forget. How can I? Baba gave me the full treatment.
He was determined to impress my mother. He not only shaved off all my
hair. He took off every strand that lined my face and replaced it with a sharp
concave line from ear to ear with his manual rusty clippers. I was devastated.
I walked into class the next day greeted with what sounded like a silent but
long eeeeeeew from every one.
The experience marred me. I’ve seen Baba in
a few nightmares attempting to dispossess me of my Afro. So imagine my horror
when my hair started dramatically falling out two months after my boys were
born. I was deluded by someone who told me I was lucky to be carrying boys as
‘boys don’t take you hair away’ they give you even more. She was right.
Initially at least. Never had better hair than when I was pregnant.
So slowly
but surely Baba barber was beckoning another visit. But I decided that this
time around. It was going to be on my own terms, I was going to love my scalp
back to a happy place and then cut hair myself when the time was right. Just to
start over.
Today was that day, a shoot didn’t happen so I had a lil time in my
hands I chopped it all off. Not with old rusty clippers but my own
scissors, It makes me look even more like my mum. So will I be missing my big
afro? Absolutely!! But then again, I’m a Nigerian woman in 2015 and I watch
YouTube I know a thousand ways to get that baby bouncing in air again In a
heartbeat. I’ll just have fun with this in the mean time. I think I did better
than baba barber tho....
this post appeared first on thenet.ng
No comments:
Post a Comment